The Sentinel-Record

Gates draws opponent for House seat

- JOHN MORITZ

State Rep. Mickey Gates, R-Hot Springs, who faces possible expulsion from the Arkansas House next week over his failure to pay taxes, now has a political opponent.

Don Pierce, an administra­tor at Lakeside High School, said Thursday he will enter the 2020 GOP primary in Gates’ House District 22. Pierce ran against Gates in the 2018 primary, losing by 26 points.

In the rematch, however, Pierce said he was not focused on Gates’ tax troubles. Instead, the 58-year-old said he would run with the same public-education focus that he relied on a year ago.

“I’m not coming after Mickey,” he said.

A month after 2018’s May primary, Gates was charged with failing to file more than a decade’s worth of tax returns. Prosecutor­s alleged that he owed

$259,849, setting off a political standoff between the three-term lawmaker and leaders in his own party.

Gates, 59, cruised to re-election last November in the heavily Republican district, while ignoring calls from Gov. Asa Hutchinson, Lt. Gov. Tim Griffin and Attorney General Leslie Rutledge to step down.

Then, this July, Gates changed his plea to “no contest” on several of the tax charges and agreed to pay $74,789 to the state. Still, he refused to step down.

After weighing a response, House Speaker Matthew Shepherd, R-El Dorado, filed a resolution to expel Gates, which the House will meet to consider on Oct. 11. More than half of the

100-member House told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette last month that they will vote to remove Gates. The state constituti­on requires 67 votes to do so.

Gates said Friday he will file a legal challenge to keep his seat if the House votes to expel him. He said he will run for re-election next year.

Gates said that in conversati­ons with his constituen­ts, they have been understand­ing of his situation. He has argued that his plea is not an admission of guilt because the state will resolve the case without adjudicati­on if he completes the terms of his probation.

He also says the charges against him are retributio­n for legislatio­n he filed to limit state auditors’ ability to look into people’s tax records beyond seven years.

“I can’t tell you how many widows have come up to me and said the state audited them after their husband died,” Gates said. “They had to write big checks.”

As for Pierce, Gates’ said he didn’t have any harsh words for his opponent, calling him “a fine man.”

Pierce said his disagreeme­nts with Gates’ voting records lie largely in two issues: school choice and guns.

As a public school employee and member of the Jessievill­e School Board, Pierce said he did not see public schools operating on a “even playing field” with private schools in a way that would justify voucher programs, which Gates supports.

Gates said, “I support school choice. I think parents should decide for their child where they go to school.”

While both candidates said local school boards should be able to decide whether to allow teachers to carry guns in schools, Pierce expressed support for some extra measures — including universal background checks and short waiting periods — to ensure that people barred from owning weapons cannot purchase them.

Gates said, “I don’t support any additional gun laws.”

Pierce said he has not yet taken a position on Arkansas’ “private option” Medicaid expansion program, which uses mostly federal dollars to purchase health insurance plans for more than 250,000 low-income Arkansans. Gates has voted against the program in the past.

Asked whether the Legislatur­e should vote to expel Gates on Oct. 11, Pierce said he would leave that decision up to current lawmakers, while suggesting that it would have been wise for Gates to resign.

“If your governor’s asking you to step down … he should probably step down,” Pierce said.

Gates, meanwhile, said he was aware of at least four other people “looking at” running in the Republican primary against him. No Democrat has yet announced for the district.

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